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Recovery Options for the New Year
"Recovery Options for the New Year" The New Year is coming up and many of us make New Year's resolutions, so I'd like to take this time to awaken those in need to some options for recovery if you suffer from addictions as I do. I do not need to wait to the years end to take self survey, since doing written inventory work and introspection is part of my 12 step work. I started with 12 step programs in 1974 and am now in 8 - 12 step programs myself. The 12 step programs branched out from Alcoholics Anonymous and all operate more or less along the same principles of the 12 Steps and 12 Traditions of AA. A thing is addictive for me when I lose control of it and the addiction has control of me. Is the activity placing unreasonable demands on my time and energy, will it place me in legal jeopardy or endanger my mental, physical or spiritual health? There are more specific questions that each 12 step program uses in its literature that can guide you. We must remember that not having control over a certain area once in a a while does not make a person an addict. Even normal people drink too much once in a while, normal people might eat too much once in a while and normal people spend or have sex or spend too much once in a while. The difference between addicts and normal people is, normal people can stop when they see they have gone too far, whereas addicts cannot stop even under penalty of death. An important thing to remember with recovery is the 3-D's: Desire, Determination and Diligence. Desire: Desire is the foundation for all recovery quests. You cannot help someone without the desire in them to be helped. Desire is what gets us taking that first step in the right direction when all seems hopeless. Have you every tried to give advice or help someone in need and they respond: "I don't care." They lack the desire or at least this is what they say. Desire must come from within, you cannot force someone to change, they must change themselves. But, before a desire to change can be manifested, one must come to a "realization" that a change needs to occur in ones life. Determination: Determination serves two purposes here. When something is "determined" it is accepted as fact. We have determined that we are powerless over our addiction and our lives are unmanageable. We have determined we must abstain from certain people, places or things that we cannot comfortably have in our lives. We are in the process of determining a new set of rules on how to live. We have also determined what injuries we have caused and what needs to be repaired through taking personal inventory. Determination serves a second purpose and that is it keeps us on the long road to recovery. We cannot keep on this long road without being determined to change our lives day in day out. Whether it is debt recovery, clutter, restructuring our complex lives or losing weight it all takes time and determination to stay on the path of recovery. Many distractions, detours and set backs along the way, but we should always be determined to keep pointed in the direction of recovery. Diligence: Diligence keeps us from going backwards once we finally arrive at the recovery place we are aiming for. It takes diligence once we get to where we want to be to maintain that serene spot, otherwise we fall back on our old "natural" ways of living. Once you get sober and abstinent from your drug of choice, once you lose the fat, once you pay off your debts, once you clean up the clutter, it takes diligence to keep you that way. Most of the following 12 Step programs are on the web via a search. ADD / ADHD Anonymous Adult Children of Alcoholics Alcoholics Anonymous Al-Anon & Ala-Teen Arts Anonymous BODA (Business Owners DA) Cancer Anonymous Clutterers Anonymous Co-Anon Cocaine Anonymous Co-Dependents of Sex Addicts CODA (Codependents Anon) Compulsive Eaters Anonymous / H.O.W. Computer Addicts Anonymous Couples Anonymous Crystal Meth Anonymous Debtors Anonymous Divorce Anonymous Dual Recovery Anonymous Emotions Anonymous Emotional Health Anonymous Families Anonymous Fear Of Success Anonymous Food Addict Anonymous Gam-Anon Gamblers Anonymous Herpes Anonymous He-She Anonymous HIV Anonymous Incest Survivors Anonymous Jews in Recovery Lesbians Anonymous Marijuana Anonymous Manic Depressive Anonymous Messies Anonymous Money Anonymous Nar-Anon Family Groups Narcotics Anonymous NA Nicotine Anonymous meetings Nine Step Pagans (I won't discriminate even if they only use 9 steps.) Overachievers Anonymous Overeaters Anonymous Obsessive Compulsive Anonymous Parents Anonymous Pills Anonymous Procrastinators Anonymous Rageaholics Anonymous Recoveries Anonymous Trauma Anonymous Twelve Steps for Pagans S-Anon Sex Addicts Anonymous Sex & Love Addicts Anonymous Sexaholics Anonymous Sexual Compulsives Anonymous Spenders Anonymous Survivors of Incest Anonymous Vulgarity Anonymous Vulganon Workaholics Anonymous Wishing You All a Healthy and Peaceful New Year, V (Male) A Christian-Buddhist practitioner living a life of Voluntary Simplicity and grateful recovering Debtor, Drug, Alcohol and Substance Abuser, Compulsive Overeater, Clutterer, Hoarder, Rageaholic, Speculative Gambler, Compulsive Spender, Sex and Sensation Addict. |
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Re: Recovery Options for the New Year
On 30 Dec 2005 12:11:22 -0800, "V" <vfr44@aol.com> wrote:
>"Recovery Options for the New Year" > > > > The New Year is coming up and many of us make New Year's resolutions, >so I'd like to take this time to awaken those in need to some options >for recovery if you suffer from addictions as I do. I do not need to >wait to the years end to take self survey, since doing written >inventory work and introspection is part of my 12 step work. I started >with 12 step programs in 1974 and am now in 8 - 12 step programs >myself. The 12 step programs branched out from Alcoholics Anonymous and >all operate more or less along the same principles of the 12 Steps and >12 Traditions of AA. There is a way to regain your life and be happy but you will have to renounce the 12-Steps in order to find out. Been there, done that! From The New Lexicon Webster's Encyclopedic Dictionary of the English Language: Submit - v.t. to cause to undergo || to offer (oneself) of one's free will, [to submit oneself to an ordeal] Surrendering_to_God is not a Christian teaching. God is NOT OUR ADVERSARY. Surrendering implies that we have no choice in the matter while "submission", though similar, retains our free choice. Submission to God IS a Christian teaching. There is a spirit who masquarades as God, who says he is god and he will use any means to get you to devote yourself to him and his cause. THIS spirit is the one that wants us to surrender NOT God. Any spirit that wants us to "surrender" is NOT GOD BY NATURE (Gal 4:8). IF you are Christian and are involved in 12-Steppery then I urge you to look more closely at your chosen Recovery Program and see what you find. http://my.tbaytel.net/nitesky/12-step/index.html -- Regards Gordie |
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